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As the internet becomes more clogged up with traffic it is easy to forget how
critical it is for businesses, writes Bob Tarzey

Recent research from analyst firm
Quocirca
has shown that about 42 per cent of European businesses now rely on web-enabled
applications and these are often being accessed over the internet.
Not surprisingly, portals, which are inherently web-based, featured at the top
of the list of applications that businesses have web-enabled.
But businesses are also directly web-enabling certain key business applications,
specifically to allow direct access to them from the outside. These include
customer relationship management, supply chain management and enterprise
resource planning. These applications are the most widely accessed by external
organisations, those in which business management take the most interest and
those that cause the most concern should access become unavailable.
And herein lies the problem. Opening up business applications to suppliers,
customers and trading partners is a great idea if businesses want to automate
and speed up certain processes. But, if to do this they are relying on an
overused public network, these benefits are at risk if the network becomes too
slow or fails.
Businesses that rely on web-enabled applications are aware of this conundrum;
they have high expectations of internet performance and availability, but real
concerns about the internet being able to deliver. However, most are proactive
in trying to improve and guarantee performance.
The first thing many businesses do is throw more hardware at the problem, which
will make no difference if the network is failing. They are also likely to place
limitations on what their employees can do on the internet - this will reduce
traffic over the parts they own (such as broadband connections in branches) and
is likely to have a positive impact on productivity. But it will not do much to
ensure web-enabled applications perform well over the internet.
To do this requires more subtle techniques. A minority have turned to hardware
appliances from vendors such as Riverbed, Expand and Packeteer, which are
designed to reduce, compress and accelerate traffic between branches and data
centres. However, such products do little to help remote users on laptops or
external users, unless there is also a PC-based software client for
communicating with a data centre-based appliance. Some vendors are now starting
to offer this capability.
Another way of guaranteeing a better and more reliable experience is to
subscribe to a managed service, offered by vendors such as Akamai. Such services
keep the internet connection between a user and the application under constant
review and optimise the route and performance.
Appliances and managed services are not direct alternatives but are often
complementary. In Quocirca’s survey, about 25 per cent of respondents were using
one or the other and of these about one-third were using both.
While the internet is becoming more essential for the delivery of inter-company
business processes, ensuring optimum and consistent performance will become
increasingly problematic as the internet’s users compete for resources. Those
businesses that achieve the most from web-enabling applications will be those
who find the best ways of guaranteeing performance levels.
Quocirca’s report Web-enabled applications and the internet is free for
CRN readers to download at
Quocirca's
home page.
Bob Tarzey is service director at Quocirca.